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Elizabeth Ann Labadorf – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Behavior-change theories reliably explain behavior, but they often lack messaging recommendations to modify behavior. The Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) could benefit from clear, replicable messaging strategies to target its constructs of attitudes, social norms, and perceived behavioral control (PBC) about a behavior (Ajzen, 1991). Habit Theory…
Descriptors: College Students, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Study Habits
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Aleksandra Kobicheva; Elena Tokareva; Tatiana Baranova – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
Phubbing is not only a consequence of technological advancements but also represents an entirely novel aspect of social conduct, impacting students' academic performance and the sustainability of development. The purpose of the study is to identify the relationship between students' level of phubbing, academic engagement and academic performance…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Learner Engagement, Computer Use, College Students
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Arnold B. Bakker; Karina Mostert – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
This article reviews the literature on student well-being (burnout and engagement) and their relationships with study demands and resources, student behaviors (proactive and self-undermining study behaviors), and student outcomes in higher education. Building on research that used Job Demands-Resources and Study Demands-Resources models to…
Descriptors: Student Welfare, Learner Engagement, Burnout, Student Behavior
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Abraham E. Flanigan; Jordan Wheeler; Tiphaine Colliot; Junrong Lu; Kenneth A. Kiewra – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Many college students prefer to type their lecture notes rather than write them by hand. As a result, the number of experimental and quasi-experimental studies comparing these two note-taking mediums has flourished over the past decade. The present meta-analytic research sought to uncover trends in the existing studies comparing achievement and…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, College Students, Notetaking, Handwriting
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Pallavi Nayyar; Betül Demirdögen; Scott E. Lewis – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2024
This qualitative study delves into the intricate landscape of general chemistry students' study strategy decision-making processes, examining the guiding factors that shape their choices. Past work in chemistry education has shown that students' study behaviors are dynamic in nature. Employing self-regulation theory, the study aims to provide a…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Decision Making, Study Habits
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Jenifer, Jalisha B.; Levine, Susan C.; Beilock, Sian L. – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2023
Students who experience mathematics anxiety have long been suggested to engage in avoidance behaviors that negatively impact their mathematics performance. However, little is known about how these avoidance behaviors manifest for highly anxious students within the context of a mathematics course. Since the use of effortful study strategies has…
Descriptors: College Students, Mathematics Anxiety, Calculus, Tests
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Kathleen Hefferon; Anna Levina – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2024
Metacognition is often described as the awareness and regulation of learning. It uses strategies which include monitoring one's own thinking, engaging in active planning and self-evaluating one's study habits. Bloom's taxonomy can be used as a metacognitive tool to guide students' study strategies and thus improve their academic performance by…
Descriptors: College Students, College Faculty, Microbiology, Plants (Botany)
Chandler Ann Findley – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The extant literature on regret as motivation for behavior presents inconclusive results, collectively. While it has often been agreed that regret motivates reparative action, most studies from the past 14 years indicate that regret may motivate either detrimental actions or, more commonly, no action at all. There also appears to be no published…
Descriptors: Correlation, Academic Achievement, Longitudinal Studies, Sample Size
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Katherine E. McLendon; Andrew T. Roach; Daniel B. Crimmins – Journal of Inclusive Postsecondary Education, 2023
Although there is research demonstrating benefits of inclusive postsecondary education (IPSE) programs for students with intellectual disabilities (ID), much less is known about IPSE students' classroom-related, non-academic thoughts, attitudes, and behaviors, sometimes referred to as academic enabling behaviors, including interpersonal skills,…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Inclusion, Postsecondary Education
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Isabel Muñoz-San Roque; Gonzalo Aza-Blanc; Marta Hernández-Arriaza; Eluska Fernández – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
Self-regulation of learning refers to the actions that students perform before, during and after their learning processes take place and has a social and collaborative component. This article analyses key dimensions of learning regulation in a sample of 697 students from different subject areas (Education, Engineering, Economics and Law studies)…
Descriptors: College Students, Self Management, Peer Relationship, Fatigue (Biology)
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Cursi Campos, Heloisa – Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology, 2020
Students usually procrastinate, which might increase anxiety levels and decrease test scores. Previous studies used between-groups comparisons to explore ways to deter procrastination, a design that did not allow analyses of individual procrastination patterns. In the present two studies, college students' individual self-regulation and…
Descriptors: Time Management, College Students, Student Behavior, Motivation Techniques
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Iustina Alexandra Groza; Marius Ciprian Ceobanu; Cristina Maria Tofan – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024
Academic procrastination has been a subject of particular interest in research due to its frequent association with heightened levels of anxiety, stress, and the long-term risk of emotional and behavioural vulnerability (Hoge et al., 2013). Our study tests the correlation between motivational persistence as a trait and academic procrastination, as…
Descriptors: Study Habits, Females, Foreign Countries, Student Motivation
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Franziska Wehrhahn; Robert Gaschler; Fang Zhao – Psychology Learning and Teaching, 2024
Online-only course design has to balance students' needs to experience (1) competence and (2) autonomy as it may affect their motivation. Lecture units can provide structured guidance by being made accessible in a fixed order, or support students' autonomy by providing free access to all lecture units. Online-only courses with lecture units…
Descriptors: Guidance, Asynchronous Communication, Online Courses, Student Attitudes
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Wu, Rongxiu; Chiu, Chungyi; Dueber, David; Park, Mirang; Lange, Dustin; Umucu, Emre; Strauser, David – International Journal of Testing, 2023
The current study examined the factor structure, measurement invariance, and construct validity of the 14-item Revised Developmental Work Personality Scale (RDWPS) using a sample of 603 college students in a Midwest university of the United States. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis results indicated that the 11-item RDWPS resulted in a…
Descriptors: Test Validity, College Students, Gender Differences, Personality Traits
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Arianna Costantini; Arnold B. Bakker; Yuri S. Scharp – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
We use three studies to develop and validate the new concept of playful study design -- the cognitive-behavioral orientation towards study tasks with the aim to make these tasks more fun and/or more challenging. Based on play and proactive motivation theories, we propose that playful study design can be assessed by items indicating two dimensions:…
Descriptors: Play, Competition, Student Behavior, Well Being
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